Timcast IRL - Epstein Files Release IMMINENT, Trump AG Says List Is ON HER DESK w/ Will Chamberlain
Episode Date: February 22, 2025Phil, Brett, & Raymond are joined by Will Chamberlain to discuss Trump AG Pam Bondi saying she will release the Epstein files, Trump firing the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and Trump winning... trade war against Ukraine. Hosts: Phil @PhilThatRemains (X) Brett @PopCultureCrisis Raymond @raymondgstanley (X) Serge @SergeDotCom (everywhere) Guest: Will Chamberlain @willchamberlain (X) Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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BetMGM operates pursuant to an operating agreement with iGaming Ontario. attorney general bondi says that the epstein client list is sitting on my desk right now. She's reviewing the JFK and MLK files. This is a promises made, promises kept
story. The Trump administration has made it clear that these things are going to be released to the
public. And seeing as Kash Patel has been confirmed by the Senate, it seems that this is going to be actually information that gets out to the public.
So we're going to talk about that. There's some new information about Sean Diddy Combs in related
nude. Sean P. Diddy Combs lawyer quits his sex trafficking case. The quote was under no circumstances
can I continue. So we'll get into that and see what that actually means.
Then on more serious, well, I mean, I guess it's kind of serious, serious news.
Trump has fired the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff.
That's a big deal.
The chairman of the Joint Chiefs, that's the head general.
Trump let him go, and we don't have a whole lot of information that broke just as the show started tonight.
But we'll get into that. The judge has denied the bid to block the administration from placing USAID workers on leave.
We'll talk about that. Judge defers ruling in the Eric Adams case, appointing a lawyer to guide decision. So it seems that Kathy Hochul will not be trying to replace Mayor Eric Adams, but we'll discuss that.
There's been a bunch of a bunch of incidents or a bunch of news coming out of Israel with the release of bodies,
not prisoners, not even prisoners, bodies of what were Hamas's hostages.
And it's kind of a horror show, but we'll talk about that.
And then it's 2020 all over again.
COVID like bat virus discovered by researchers in Chinese lab. The Wuhan Institute of Virology has some kind of new bug,
and hopefully it stays in Wuhan.
But before we get into all that,
head on over to Rumble Premium and become a member there.
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Junior.
Raymond G. Stanley Jr., my bad.
Go on over to TimCast.com and become a member there and join our Discord.
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show with your friends go on over to timcast.com become a member tonight to talk about all these
things and a whole bunch more we've've got Wilt Chamberlain.
Thank you.
Returning champion.
Yeah, right.
The return of the prodigal son.
No, it's good to be back.
It's been a while since I've been on IRL, and I'm always happy to be here.
I'm senior counsel at the Article III Project, working with Mike Davis.
We work and have been successful, I think, in getting a huge slew of Trump's nominees confirmed.
I mean, obviously, there's a lot of people, other people working, but.
Well, you haven't, the only person that hasn't been confirmed that Trump picked was his first
AG pick for Gates, right?
Yeah, well, I mean, I think he got ultimately what he wanted, which was to be a, you know,
he's now a primetime host on OAN, so congratulations.
Good for him.
But yeah, I think, you know, other than that, and that lasted four days, I think.
I think a lot of people thought it would go worse with the nominees.
There were a lot of people betting a lot of people would have been not gotten through the process.
So we're happy to see that's something that I'd like to talk a little bit more about tonight to the confirmation process and just how successful Donald Trump has been getting.
Not only the people that he wants, but how successful his first couple weeks has been so far.
But we'll get to that.
Brett's here.
Yes, guys.
Brett here.
Normally, I am hosting Pop Culture Crisis Monday through Friday at 3 p.m. Eastern on YouTube.
But tonight, we've got a bunch of stuff to get into it.
So let's go.
Hey, what's up, guys?
This is Remy G. Stanley, Jr., by the way.
I work here at TimCast.
I'm your local veteran and blue-collar fella.
Talking about the Discord real quick, I just want to shout out.
We lost someone recently.
But Mickey Tech, he was a big part of the community.
He helped us start.
He's a great guy.
He actually helped me build my
um my my ford align logo so he's part who's part of the family we lost him so but uh so i want his
family doesn't want anything just um they just want to if you want to contribute guys in the
discord uh you can go to cast off pet rescue uh dot.org to donate for him in his name.
Shout out Mickey Tech, RIP.
That's really hard to deal with the losing people, losing family members, losing friends.
It's a really tough thing.
And that speaks to one of the things that the Discord has really done.
It's given people a place to really,
like I said,
we talk about meeting like-minded people and stuff.
And one of the hard truths of life is when you care about people,
losing them really hurts.
And so we send our best out
to Raymond G. Stanley Jr.'s friends and stuff.
All right.
We're going to go ahead
and get into the news today we're gonna start with
the bondi says epstein client list sitting on my desk right now and is reviewing the jfk mlk files
i'm of the opinion that this is an important story to a fairly narrow group of people but i think
that and the thing the reason i say this is because there are people that find it extremely interesting. And the content of it, right?
Like children being raped, it's a serious story.
What do you mean by narrow group of people?
Like just people who have kept their focus on that specifically?
Yeah, I think that I mean that there are people that are really, really, really interested in this story.
It connects with the Diddy Files because what it is is both of those cases have become this sort of quasi catch-all for when somebody doesn't like someone on the internet they say you know they're
probably in the Diddy files they're probably in the Epstein files so actually seeing something
done about it and seeing follow-through actually is a really really big deal yeah I think and there
are people that that I think that it's really important to, but the thing that I, but what I also think that because I say it's narrow because it doesn't have a major impact on most people's lives.
It's important that people that have done these kind of crimes, committed these kind of crimes, you know, like child trafficking and stuff, it's important that the FBI go after them.
So I think it's very good that that cash is not only putting this information out so that people can see it and so
that we bring this to light but hopefully there will be arrests if they if there are names on
these on these lists of people that have actual that have you know that are implicated in committing
crimes the fbi should get them they should wrap them up and they should be prosecuted and it
doesn't matter who they are but i what when i said when i said, what I mean is it doesn't have a really big effect
on the average person's life. Well, no, the cases themselves, the actual list does not have an
effect on the average everyday person's life. But an erosion of trust in the government,
an erosion of trust in power speaks to the average everyday person's reasons for voting
for Donald Trump. And one of the big parts of that is they feel like the government has been held unaccountable.
They feel like celebrities like that get to spout off anything they want and nothing bad
happens to them, no matter how much bad they do in the world.
So that depends on your idea of average everyday lives and whether it affects them.
Because if it brings back a certain amount of trust in the people that we're supposed to believe are out to help us or at least uh enforce the laws then there
is some type of benefit for everybody because it can help start building trust once again with
these institutions that we don't seem to care for anymore his during his speech today was beautiful
when he got when he uh signed in i got sworn in, I'm sorry. And he said accountability like three times.
It was the energy in that room when he was talking.
Everyone was so excited.
He had the boys in his room with him.
And so Cash Patel being sworn in,
hopefully he brings us that accountability
that we're all looking for and we're seeking.
Will, do you have a sense of what kind of director
Cash is going to be?
I mean, he's going to be a badass.
We've seen Cash is extraordinarily effective. I think the thing that Cash did during the first administration,
he was working for Devin Nunes. He did an incredible job revealing what Adam Schiff
and what a lot of the Democrats had been doing to try and screw the Trump administration, to try and
manufacture the Russian narrative. He's really diligent.
And he's also been targeted by these people.
I think one of the best parts of the way that Trump has set up his cabinet is in so many cases, he's chosen people that have been in some way
the victim of the agency they're now overseeing, right?
Like he chose Tulsi Gabbard as the head of DNI.
Tulsi Gabbard was on the deep sky, blue skies, deep skies?
I think it was quiet skies.
Quiet skies, right the some skies yeah uh the program that was you know instituting the
surveillance over her and now she gets to supervise them one of the things that i find most
uh problematic with that is is you know tulsi gabbard as a lieutenant colonel in the national
guard i think she was the reserves lieutenant colon Colonel in the reserves, like that, to be that, to, to mean, to, to achieve that kind of rank, like, that's not
just a, that's not like, you know, a butter bars Lieutenant, you know, that's a, that's
a, a very high ranking person.
And to think that, that even though she's gone through all the vetting necessary to
not only be that, you know, to, to, to be an officer in the, in the, in the National
Guard and then an officer in the reserves, but also to continue to get promotions while after they've already started to slimer and and stuff.
I think that it speaks to to how, you know, how bad the the narrative building machine, you know, was and how they were treating people. But you mentioned the people that Donald Trump had gotten confirmed,
but I think it was Bhattacharya?
Bhattacharya, yeah.
Bhattacharya was targeted by NIH, right?
NIH and Francis Collins, who's the previous head,
did all this work to marginalize him, and now he's running NIH.
And that's a sort of consistent theme where this is not going to be the first administration.
I supported Governor DeSantis in the primary.
A lot of people know that.
And I went down to actually work for him.
And, I mean, a big part of it wasn't – I was a Trump supporter in the first term, but I knew that there were issues with how he had staffed up.
And he just – he had a lot of trouble kind of getting a hold the administration and i think he'd admit as much but what i've been thrilled by the first month of trump too and every pick and
it's just clear like not only has he learned from the mistakes of the first term has he selected
people who are not gonna just be captured by their institutions uh he's also personally very invested
in ensuring that the government functions the way
it should this time and i think you know i really think in in many ways it's like the four years off
has has done him really good um and and we're about to i'm just i'm thrilled with what i'm
seeing i think we're about to have a really amazing even even look at how like vocal in
front of the camera jd vance is in comparison to Mike Pence during the first term, he's taken a much more front seat approach to how he's taking on the media and pushing forward the ideas of the Trump
administration is trying to push through. And he is very, very good for that. And it speaks to a
big change between term one and term two. Yeah, I think it's important that not only
Donald Trump be, you know, Donald Trump and talk to the media the same way that he does and be that strong persona
that he is.
But having a vice president that will also take the media to task is one of the things
that I really think that, especially looking back, one of the worst things about Pence
was he was clearly the old was clearly the the old guard establishment
and he wouldn't stand up and say you know what no the president is right and actually take it to the
to the left and the media has been such a a valuable tool to the left and only recently has
has kind of the rest of the the country or or when I say the rest of the country, I mean like the people that used to say, no, it's not that the media is biased,
it's just that they're mostly in the city, so they have kind of a default urban perspective.
No, that's not true at all.
They're actually funded by NGOs and funded by organizations that are looking to push a narrative
that comes straight out of the government.
You know, when you talk about the USAID money that was going to, you know, Politico and other organizations.
I think the key thing with Vance is Vance means that Trump isn't a lame duck.
Yeah.
Because Vance represents a further eight years of continuation of what Trump is doing.
And I think that's so different from the first term where Pence was clearly not of the MAGA world.
And so it's an opportunity to create a wedge.
It puts in question whether or not this is going to be the permanent direction of the Republican Party.
If you answer the end of that, you have, you know, he's young, an elite communicator in his own right.
Yes, he's a fantastic speaker.
And he can take the media to task in a way that sometimes even better than Trump can.
Like he is a better communicator, a better speaker.
And he needs that right now because one of the things is, is they like to harp on the
misspeaks and the things that he says that he kind of, you know, Trump gets carried away
and he goes off and then they grab onto something, right?
Then Vance doesn't have that problem.
Kind of in the same way we would joke that Vance had this one bad moment where he tried
to go into a donut shop and
seem like a normal person and just fail i'm like you don't need him to do the normal guy shtick
he is a fantastic communicator is a fantastic front of the line politician let him do that
yeah trump trump is like the sledgehammer yes vance is the scalpel right like vance is like
surgical kind of legalistic debate mind like you know make sure just not not leave anything exposed
right and where it's like trump is just like we'll just bulldoze you it's a very but they're both
they're both great and they're both like very different and complementary styles of persuasion
not that i disagree with you but i mean i don't he he i don't disagree but the effectiveness of
of vance it's you can't overstate it the the the interview that
he did when when he got the i really don't care margaret line that was that was beautiful and i
mean it's t-shirts and it's become a meme in and of itself and i think that those kind of moments
like really taking the media to task where i don't i don't care like there was another time where it
was like do you hear yourself?
I forget what it was. Oh, it's only one
town got taken over by
Trend de Aragua. Yeah, only one apartment complex.
Only a few apartment complexes.
The correct number of
apartment complexes to be taken over by
Trend de Aragua is zero.
And these kind of moments
really matter, and I think that he does
a fabulous job. So you were going to say? I was going to say, I think that he does a fabulous job so you were
gonna say i was gonna say i love that uh i don't know if you guys seen today he's been on
he's on x and he's using x and he's getting his message out there he's arguing arguing but he's
giving his points across he's being very transparent with what he's saying to the
arguments about the whole uk and russia thing so that while normies might not know about that
a lot of us a lot of folks who are watching the
millions and millions and millions are seeing him be transparent unlike biden and everyone else and
like give his thoughts and he's solid bro two things talking about two things first of all i
completely agree you mentioned biden i think that the the the transparency that the trump
administration has and their their availability to the press and their not just willingness,
but desire to, they relish it.
They enjoy taking these,
putting the message out there,
getting their own message out.
And when the press tries to challenge them,
they enjoy body slamming them.
And first of all, and second of all,
I loved, there was one more thing
that J.D. Vance did when he body slammed Mehdi Hassan.
I don't know if you saw that one. Yes. Vance did when he body slammed Mehdi Hassan. I don't know if you saw that one. Yes. But I'm I'm not a fan of Mehdi Hassan anyways.
And I don't remember the exact tweet off my off the top of my head, so I'm not going to try.
But it was absolutely it was brutal and wonderful. And that kind of, you know, aggressive, but but correct and factual take and willingness to correct the media.
I think that's going to pay dividends for the administration.
No, I'm thrilled.
I don't think Trump could have done any better than Vance.
So.
I feel like everyone was a little sketchy at first about J.D. Vance
because we didn't know him.
But after hearing him talk the first time, the second time, the third time,
and now we're a couple months into it, J.D. Vance is solid.
He had a fantastic debate performance. Yeah, and if mean if you paid attention to jd vance when
he because he was a senator first and so like you know if you paid attention to him you like people
he wasn't an unknown quantity people that were in the know knew how smart he is and knew his story
he wrote the book the uh hillbilly elegy i think it was called and that's right and that was really
well received and it really spoke to some real uh prescient problems in the United States. And I think much a part of the old guard and somebody who spoke to the past generations of politics and what J.D. Vance represents is the forward movement of
what they consider now to be America first. Yeah. I mean, the the the we've made this had
this conversation a little bit before, but there's there's the MAGA coalition is not a right wing
coalition the way that some people assume that it is.
And I think that I was talking a little bit to Sean about this.
It's really a coalition of not the leftists, you know, because most of the people in positions of power now are 90s Democrats or they were Democrats even very recently. And so that is the big tent kind of idea is really where the right has
capitalized. And there, I mean, obviously the conservative Christians are welcome in the tent,
but that also means that you have to have room for people that are not conservative Christians.
That's why the whole Ashley St. Clair Musk thing, it was a big deal to the Christians,
the conservative Christians, but in the overall
maga kind of coalition they were like look you know maybe it's not maybe it's unbecoming but
it's not something that should be you know should be a problem for the the broader coalition because
well musk really did have a lot to do with the with with trump getting elected or some people
would take would have a problem
with like Scott Pressler's lifestyle choices well if it wasn't for Scott Pressler you don't get
Pennsylvania because Scott Pressler went to Pennsylvania lived there for four years and and
did more work in Pennsylvania than probably anybody else so as a broad coalition I think
that that's that's why I don't think that it's it's deniable or debatable. That's why Trump won. And that kind of that kind of unity is something that that comes from the left being so insane.
And really, really disconnected from what the right has become now, because most of the people, at least the way I've seen it, is the ones that suffer from like terminal leftism, like the farthest left that you can see,
they look at what it is now
and they think of it as a far right Christian nationalist party
when anybody who's paying very, very close attention to it
knows that there are too many disparate personalities
for it to be anything so succinct.
You're 100% right.
And you can hear that or you could hear that for so long
when they were trying to scare everybody
with the whole project 2025 narrative.
I read a lot of stuff about project 2025 and I'm not particularly devout
Christian or anything.
I'm,
I'm fairly agnostic,
but at the same time,
there's nothing in project 2025 that I was like,
you know,
it was,
it was,
it is not particularly.
They had to manufacture stuff.
They had to manufacture like,
they're going to make you register every abortion or something like this. It's so stupid. But you know, it is not particularly. They had to manufacture stuff. They had to manufacture, like, they're going to make you register every abortion or something like this.
It's so stupid.
But, you know, now that the election's over, we can all admit that Project 2025 was the real plan all along.
I was saying.
No, no.
I mean, even leading up to the election, I was like, look, man, Project 2025 is not bad.
I was like, if the option is project 2025 or trans the kids i'm
going with project 2025 every single time what project 2025 was really like how to take over
the government and not let the civil service run itself yes right and how to staff it properly that
was the core of the whole project philly it wasn't these random policy proposals thrown in by the
occasional person like that's the stuff that the democrats seized on and everybody objected to and that's what's not getting done but like the
the heart of project 2025 was stuff like oh yeah um civil service reform and we're firing bureaucrats
and they're going to obey us or we're going to fire them for different reasons like doj is going
to obey us you know we're going to talk a lot about doj later i think with all these drop
prosecutions but i mean that's a classic example. Like the Department of Justice is not independent. It's not.
Yeah. Phil, are you saying, sir, that folks like us who were, you know, a Democrat back in the
past when I was younger, because I was dumb. I was never a Democrat. But I mean, I'm registered
now because only because I want to be part of the primaries. But anyways, are you saying that
we're not moving into the Christian right?
They are they're not leading the Republican Party anymore.
They are coming into our the tent of middle ground.
So, no, well, I'm saying that the MAGA coalition is a coalition.
And there was and this kind of brought again, I mentioned Musk and the whole Ashley St.
Claire thing, because this is really kind of what brought to my attention.
There were so many people saying, oh, you know, this is not conservative.
This isn't this isn't conservative.
This isn't conservative.
And I'm like, you're right.
But that doesn't matter because not everyone in the in the MAGA movement is a conservative.
Right.
And you don't win if it's only conservatives.
If it's only Christian conservatives,
they just don't have the numbers to win elections.
Or the media backing the way...
Well, yeah, that's true.
That's right.
But I mean, you're 100% right.
It's a much bigger group of people now,
and Christian conservatives make up a smaller portion of it.
And so, and actually,
I've had discussions with Christians about this,
where it's like, this is still a very...
This is the religion-friendly party.
Yes, absolutely. Yeah, absolutely. We are, you know, you have... like, this is still a very—this is the religion-friendly party. Yes, absolutely.
Yeah, absolutely.
We are—you know, you have a—the other party is hostile to you and wants your way of life to go
away. We don't want that. We are religion-friendly. But we're also—there is a bigger and bigger
chunk of the party that's secular. And that's true all over the West, too, right? Religiosity
is going down, even as right-wing parties are growing. And so it's about, I think, you know,
everybody understanding that this is a coalition, that, you know, we don't want as a party to be disrespectful to religion ever.
Yes.
Right?
Like, it's really important that everybody stay respectful of religion and religious people.
While simultaneously, I think it's just religious people understand that, yeah, you're not the coalition anymore.
You're part of the coalition.
A very important part, but you're just part of it.
That's really important.
The fact that you mentioned that this is the party that's not just not hostile to religion.
It's actually friendly to religion, even the people that are not religious.
Like I consider myself agnostic, maybe a little Catholic curious.
I grew up Catholic and I've gone to Catholic mass a couple times with some friends and stuff recently.
And I find gone to Catholic mass a couple of times with some friends and stuff recently. And I find I find it extremely attractive.
I think that the values that they put forward are good for society, good for good for the country.
And I'm definitely I'm definitely fond of the things that come along with.
I'm fond of Christmas. I'm fond of of Easter.
I like the idea of the of a church community and stuff like that and so
I don't think that it's a good idea for Christians to be like hey you must be this kind of Christian
I think that if you do that if they try to do that what ends up happening is they don't kick
people out of the party they have to leave the coalition themselves well also think of like
base it solely on results right yeah whether you want to criticize the coalition themselves. Also, think of like base it solely on results, right?
Yeah. Whether you want to criticize the coalition that Trump has built,
this is still the party that helped repeal Roe v. Wade.
It is still the president who pardoned pro-life protesters at the start of his term.
There is a lot of evidence that despite the fact that the coalition of people around it may not all agree on religion,
that the party itself is doing what it can to benefit those who are religious.
Yeah.
And even if you're not religious, I think there's a lot of people in the coalition that
are like, you know, maybe I'm not particularly religious myself, but I see that if you don't
have a society that has some kind of religious grounding, something else takes the place
of religion and that something else is always place of religion, and that something else is
always bad. Always worse. I think that's also—there's a lot of mojo behind New Atheism
in the mid-2000s, and people like Chris Hitchens wrote a book, God is Not Great, Why Religion
Poisons Everything. And I think whether or not you are religious in your belief or not,
the thesis of that book was wrong. Yes.
Right? Hitchens was wrong.
It's not religion that's the reason we have crazy beliefs in this world.
We saw what happens when you have like the left, secular leftists take over.
They can believe in wilder, crazier things in any religion or any traditional religion.
And I think a big part of that is religions have thousands of, a lot of them have thousands
of years of evolution and theologians and people thinking about ethics. and most of the leftist stuff has been invented in the last 75 years
yeah by academics who are not grounded yeah and well our biggest thing uh for our coalition is
america and what's best for our country and what's best for our kids futures yeah yeah i think and i
i think that there's it's it's i it's hard to argue that religions, especially longstanding religions, it's hard to argue that they don't provide a very good roadmap on how to have a society.
And that families first, families being the first kind of small little government, I guess, is a good thing and focusing your your entire society on making sure
that families are the folk or are the the most important thing will provide for a better result
than what the left tends to do with the you know centering the margins and stuff like well i mean
or or leftists and academics in hollywood all pushing anti-family messages on just about everyone all the time.
So, all right.
We're going to move on to the next story.
Trump fires chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff.
This is actually a very, very big deal because I don't remember the last time that a chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff was ever fired.
Yeah, it's not common.
Some people have been predicting this because the CQ Brown guy was all in on DEI
and was a product of the previous Biden administration.
And so I think we've been hearing rumblings about it, that Hegseth was going to do something like this
or that Trump was going to do something, and now it's finally happening.
Good, right, good. was going to do something like this or that Trump was going to do something. And now it's finally happening. Good.
Right.
Good.
It's about it's about time we had a military that was focused on readiness and warfighting
and not on social engineering.
Yeah, that's that's something that I want to get to the social engineering aspect.
So the AP reports Washington President Donald Trump abruptly fired Air Force General C.Q.
Brown as chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff on Friday,
sidelining a history-making fighter pilot and respected officer as a part of a campaign to rid the military of leaders who support diversity and equity in the ranks.
The ouster of Brown, only the second black general to serve as chairman, is sure to send shockwaves through the Pentagon.
Can we just stop right there?
Yes, please.
Notice the thing that they said, a history-making fighter pilot.
What history did he make?
And it's like, is it really just that he's the second black general?
Is that the history?
Yes, that's their history.
I could be wrong.
There might be something.
But if I'm wrong and there actually is some history that he made independent of merely his race,
then the AP should be ashamed of itself in terms of the way it's framed this article.
Yeah.
I mean, but this speaks to the way that entire entire media thinks now, doesn't it?
You know that the the the identity of the person in question takes precedence over any of their achievements or any of the things that they've done.
You know, so Donald Trump has tweeted about this.
He says, I want to thank General Charles C.Q.
Brown for his over 40 years of service to our country, including as our current chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. He says, be the next chairman of the joint chiefs i love it um general kane is an accomplished pilot national
security expert successful entrepreneur and a warfighter with significant interagency and
special operations experience i i like the fact that donald trump was magnanimous in his in his
you know in the tweet and and for trump that'sanimous. That's about as magnanimous. Yeah, that's about as magnanimous.
That's heaping on the praise for Donald Trump.
He didn't call him names, so that's good.
And also, I didn't know Lieutenant General Kane was...
I didn't know that his nickname was...
I've never heard of this guy before, but he sounds great.
I like the idea that that was never his nickname
and Trump just gave it to him now.
Yeah, right?
He totally would.
Part of me wants that to be, like, Raisin to be his call sign, but I call.
So now that you mentioned it, I do think that it would be even better if Trump was like,
nah, I'm going to give him a nickname.
It'll be great.
I don't know anything about General Kane, so I'm going to actually...
A big thing AP should have noted was that he is the 780th general,
a white general, to hold that position.
Yes.
I was going to ask, when does it become no longer newsworthy?
Is it when you're the third ever of something?
Yeah.
No, it's when they stop talking about DEI.
It's really what it is.
Let's see. He was...
I wonder if he was...
So he's an F-16 pilot.
So if he's the 781st,
it wouldn't be newsworthy, but since he's the
780th...
When they said special operations,
I was wondering if he was something like a PJ or something
like that, or if he was... If he had done that kind of special operations, I was wondering if he was something like a PJ or something like that, or if he had done that kind of special operations job.
But either way, I do think that it's good that Donald Trump and Secretary Hegseth are putting the generals and staff on notice. I've heard that he's talking about getting rid of, like, I want to say half the generals in the military.
I mean, they deserve it.
Sorry.
I mean, we haven't, when's the last time we won a war?
You guys are all focused.
I mean, on everything I've heard about what's been going on in the military and in terms of what they're putting the rank and file through with all these idiotic trainings
and just they've screwed up the military.
Recruitment is down horribly
to the point that it's actually, you know,
implicates our security.
That's just not acceptable performance.
And I think a big thing is that general,
there hasn't been accountability at the top level
for failures by our military.
It's always been like lower level people
who've been held accountable.
How do generals at the top level for failures by our military. It's always been lower-level people who've been held accountable.
How do generals at the top and those in charge of the military
get recruitment back up then?
I mean, I just feel like that's one of those things
that there's anti-American sentiment
from within America that's very, very hard to reverse.
So just Hegseth being the sect F
has increased the enlistment ranks.
I remember there was a guest I can't I wish I could remember who it was was talking about
that members re enlisted after Trump got elected the first time because they didn't want to
you know, they weren't interested in the military under Obama.
And then I'm sure that that once again would probably pick up maybe two now after Trump
was reelected. I'm sure that that once again would probably pick up maybe two now after Trump was reelected.
I'm not sure.
But it's very, very difficult to try and reignite fervor in the military when America is having such a hard time, you know, fighting amongst itself.
I feel like there are a lot of people who want to join.
But when they see the DEI in the service, they see what's going on and they're not joining.
Are those people paying attention to those stories?
Not these stories, but once they see Trump get in, they're like joining a seat i talked to those people paying attention to those stories for them not these stories but they're once they see trump get in they're like okay cool i can join i could i can uh do what i want to do they want to fight they want to protect the
country serve without being told they're bad people yeah i mean so first of all the the the
i don't know if the majority of young men that were joining the military are white but i know
that there's a lot of Hispanics.
Oh, yeah.
Huge.
And there are times where Hispanics count as white,
so they might be counting the Hispanics as white.
But one of the things that Hispanics generally,
they don't like the progressive left stuff.
If you're the kind of Hispanic dude that's like,
I'm going to join the military, you're not. You don't want to
hear Latinx. Yeah, you don't want to hear
that.
The whole machismo thing, that's real.
And dudes are like, yo, I
love my country. I love America.
And I love my Latin
heritage, but I don't want to
deal with this kind of BS.
And I think it's
very, very good that the current sect death has made it abundantly
clear that these things are changing.
And when these kind of stories come out that Donald Trump has fired the, you know, the
top general in the in the whole military because of his take on DEI, I think that you you'd
mentioned how do we get the recruitment numbers up.
This is exactly how.
You get a leadership that is friendly to the troops.
I guarantee when Hegseth decided to get up and do PT with the special forces in Germany,
he probably got a thousand men to sign up.
A thousand 18-year-olds across
the country looked and said, that's
the kind of guy that I want to serve.
Because all of my friends that are
former and in the military,
they were just like, man, it doesn't
get any better. The sec-deafs out
there PTing in the cold with the
special forces, that's the military
I want to join. Young men are aggressive, especially if you love the country.
They got this testosterone that they want to exuberate into the world.
So when they see Pete doing his thing and they want, you know,
it's just a thing.
I mean, I joined because I wanted to do stuff and fight
and shoot guns against enemies.
That was my whole, the only reason I joined.
And I know there's, we have not, I don't think we've lost that out
there. There's definitely still many
million millions of young men who want
to do that. And you also grow up, you become a man
within four weeks, or four months,
sorry, four years, whereas
you see your college buddy dudes who are just
learning about gender, whatever you're
talking about. You know, there's a
animalistic. There is a, one of the
pictures, actually, if you could go back to that, those pictures that you had for a second there um search there was a there was
one picture that has spawned a boatload of memes and it was it was heg seth running with uh with
the special forces oh i know exactly what you're talking about it was that like big hulk looking
dude yeah right you just you just had it just put it up on images show me a hook yeah uh where to right here okay yeah there
it is oh wow yeah okay like bring that up this dude here okay this guy himself has inspired at
least a hundred dudes to say i'm going yeah. Yeah. Because I want to be that monster. Yes.
You know, like, look, that's just the kind of dude that young guys look at and they're like, I want to be that guy.
It's amazing we ever got away from that.
Like, you know, what did everybody think the military was for?
Right?
Like, you know, to like hand out flowers?
Yeah.
These are the people that when we need to, we send them to kill people.
Yeah, and when you heard General Miley saying, you know, I want to know about white rage,
that probably turned off a thousand people.
There's all, I was going to join the military, but I'm not.
Not under that guy.
Not under that fat liberal.
Yeah, especially that was, did that happen before or after the Afghan pullout.
I think that was after it was so bad.
I want to understand why it.
What an what an incredibly bad leader.
You botch the pullout of Afghanistan.
Get was something like 18 people killed.
How many people died in the bombing at 13, 13, 13, 13 Marines died, you know, and billion dollars worth of equipment left.
Left all that gear over there.
And then you have the, there's no repercussions for anyone.
No one gets fired.
No general gets fired.
No accountability.
Unbelievable.
None of them have the, like, he should have stepped down himself.
He should have said, I am resigning.
A good leader would have said, this happened on my watch yes i am resigning yeah a good leader would have said this happened
on my watch i am resigned i mean but it's like when we're talking about the jfk files or the mlk
files americans don't believe that there is any accountability within the government that's one
of the reasons why those stories pique the interest of people like wow am i actually going to get
answers on this thing that happened all these decades ago that everybody looks at one another, they know is what they're
hearing, they know what they're hearing is not the whole story. But they just kind of accepted
that's the way that things are. And in the current year to hear about any level of accountability
whatsoever, even if it's just the declassifying of files and the releasing of them, that seems
monumental to a country that's
been left in the dark for a very long time yeah i i do think that that i think you're you're right
i think that there there is a a significant distrust i think that not only is it because
the things like the jfk files and and these kind of like rumored things that people have a an
intuition about but like the obvious things as well like
the whole covid i really think covid did was like the final nail in the coffin when it came to the
credibility it's not just like they were just like like they were there was the whole like
you you don't have to wear a mask and then it was oh no you do and then come to find out the
reason they said don't you don't have to wear a mask is because they didn't have enough PPE for the doctors.
So they right out of the box, they lied to you.
Then all of the BS that comes along with it.
Come to find out that masks actually don't do a significant job of protecting you.
And all of the all of the misrepresentation, all of the lies and all of the force that went along with it, all of the threats, all of the people that would get arrested, the social distancing,
which comes out, oh, that turns out that didn't mean anything.
That was made up and all of that stuff.
I think you're right about the general consensus
and the kind of intuitive feeling people had about the MLK stuff
and the CIA with JFK.
But I think that the outright things that the media and government have come out and
said, yeah, that was not true.
I think those were like really damaging.
Yeah, it's when even if you don't pay close attention to what's going on, you've heard
in passing or in some fashion about what we do with our intelligence agencies overseas and the ways that we have gone into other countries and nation building and all of these things.
And then to see those tactics then turn back around on the American people.
Again, if you're paying attention to the corners and don't listen to it regularly they are they just started
to understand just the power of the intelligence apparatus and the way we've weaponized government
against other people yeah we're gonna go there's we're gonna go on to one another story in just a
second there's one thing i want to mention you mentioned about nation building and i think that
that mike bentz has has made a lot of thing people aware of usa id and all the things they do and he
he's also i think that he's performing an important function now with,
he's kind of making, he's out there in the podcast world again saying,
look, these organizations have been corrupted,
but that doesn't mean that these organizations are all bad.
And a country like the United States with the amount of power
and with the expectations that the rest of the world puts on the United States, because we are expected to be the hegemon still, and we are expected be DEI stuff and the U.S. shouldn't be trying to go into strongly religious countries and teach them about LGBT issues and stuff like that.
That's completely ridiculous.
But having these organizations that will project soft power is important.
I wanted to get your thoughts on that.
On that point?
Oh, yeah, absolutely.
I mean, I'm a big, you know, this is sort of my general, one of my main critiques of libertarianism.
But it's like, do we really want to let somebody else be the guardian of sea lanes?
You want that to be China?
No?
Okay.
Right?
Like we are, it's, I think I tweeted out a while ago.
It's like, it was in response to the Trump Gaza stuff where I think everybody was freaking out about the idea that we might control some territory.
And I'm just like, it's okay to be an empire.
Like we can just do colonialism if we want.
You know,
like, nation-based,
colonialism,
I don't know, though.
A lot of countries used to do it.
So, the point being that,
you know, yeah,
we are,
there's a lot of benefits
that come to us
as a result of being
so powerful.
That's a great distinction, though,
that there is a difference
between nation-building
and colonialism.
Right.
Nation-building is when you spend a bunch of money for other people. Colonialism is when you spend it for yourself.
I mean, I think the big issue for a lot of the people is, though, is like these organizations are so large and the amount of money put into it is so ungodly that they're like, who are we putting in charge to actually put the checks and balances into place to know that what we're doing is right?
And most of the time what we're seeing now is you see USAID gets exposed and whole entire NGOs fold.
Well, you're not really a non-governmental agency if you can't survive without the government, right?
And all I'm saying is to the average person, like I said, Mike Benz,'ve preached i have said to the he is one of the best right you have to go read through everything you post but you're not going
to expect the average person to go into these deep dives and understand all of that what you have to
understand is that the size of the country is now vast we are so powerful that it's ripe for
corruption and most people want to see wield it see that undone now the, and I do, I fully admit that I, for the most part, have a very utopian idea, a non-interventionist
idea of global politics that is not in line 100% with reality, that the way the world
works is obviously far more complicated than the way I would like things to be.
But I don't see my viewpoint as the right answer.
I see it as a jumping off point for a discussion on how we can pare back some of it and find
a middle ground.
All right.
We're going to move on to this story here from the New York Post.
Sean Diddy Combs lawyer quits sex trafficking case under no circumstances.
Can I continue?
You got to be real dirty when your lawyer's like, bro, you fucked up.
Imagine being like a defense attorney who's just like i can't even do it man i i i can't imagine that that like
i mean i i imagine he you know and it's not like sean combs doesn't have money to pay the man
you know and i read the article it didn't seem like he had much he said that he doesn't really
he didn't really give a reason he's just like i, I can't do it. Yeah, I mean...
I want to look at this motion.
So the New York Post is reporting,
one of Sean Diddycombe's defense lawyers
quit the disgraced music producer's criminal sex trafficking case
new court paper show.
Anthony Rico filed a motion Thursday
to withdraw as one of Bad Boy Records'
six defense attorneys without explanation.
Rico's bid to step down won't be official until a judge signs off on it.
A judge must find sufficient reason to approve such a request.
Under no circumstances.
Can I continue to effectively serve as counsel for Sean Combs?
Rico wrote in the Manhattan federal court affidavit affidavit.
It is respectfully,
but regrettably requested the court grant the relief requested.
The lawyer didn't elaborate on why he wanted to step down, but noted the decision came after spending after speaking with Combs lead counsel Mark Agnophilo.
I mean, so obviously there's just going to be inference and people are going to make assumptions. But it seems likely that the things that P. Diddy has done are so egregious that his
lawyer is like, I won't be a party. I'm finally understanding what's going on here. So this is
less revealing than I think we would think it would be. It's really not. Because there's six
lawyers in the case, and it's one of the lawyers being like, I cannot be his lawyer. There are a
lot of reasons why a lawyer might make that decision so or make that ask to be let off the
case conflict of interest is the most obvious one like some some apparent you know for example you
know diddy has like all these people that he previously you know we hit the dealist retirement
all that it's a conceivable that this rico guy represented a different client and might have
knowledge that came from that and realize that like i'm someone okay in some sort of like conflict
of interest situation it also could be payment but it doesn't seem likely because he's wealthy
and there's five other lawyers who are still going to be on board so i'm guessing what this is is
some sort of like newly a conflict that he became newly aware of because that that explains the
firmness of the like i can't be his lawyer right like and
that that that strikes me as very much like conflict of interest your ethical rules are
prohibiting you from going forward and a whole bunch of cases have continued to be pushed forward
i mean it was the it was the lawyer i believe his name was tony busby was the lawyer who was filing
all those cases on behalf of people who were filing claims against Diddy that have just come forward and forward.
And I think some of those have actually been dropped since then.
And the charges against Jay-Z were dropped in the case between him and Diddy of the – it was like the rape of the girl back in 2000 or 2001, something like that.
So I don't know how much I actually expect to come out of this case, but I think the more interesting discussion is about the concept of him having a list of people, you know, having a list of blackmail
against powerful people in Hollywood, because a lot of people see that list akin to the
way that they saw the Epstein files with politicians and world leaders.
Yeah, I think the, again, I think the Epstein file would be more impactful.
I think that the P. Diddy list would be more salacious.
P. Diddy would be rolling around.
Those would be people you've actually heard of.
Yeah, the ones on the Epstein files you've never heard of.
P. Diddy's going to be rolling around with millionaires and multimillionaires.
Maybe there's a couple people that might reach a billion.
But, you know, when you're dealing with the Epstein list,
that's power players and people that are, you know, powerful on on the international scale beyond just I'm an entertainer, but like actual heads of state.
Prince Prince Philip was disgraced because of the Epstein.
Do you think that there's like overlap between because I think me and you and Mary had this discussion at one point about whether there was overlap between the lists?
I think that there's some, but I don't think that it's the lists i think that there's some but i don't
think that it's i don't think that it's significant yeah i think that i think that not that not that
the people that p diddy hangs out with wouldn't be interesting to people in positions of high of
actual power because again like someone like p diddy's got you know a lot of power and a lot of
money and that means a lot but that's not prince philip that's not a that's got a lot of power and a lot of money, and that means a lot. But that's not Prince Philip.
That's not a prince of England.
That's not – like those kind of powerful people are different.
No, but if we're talking about the people who are pushing cultural values of leftism on America, it's the entertainers.
It's Hollywood.
It's those people that have helped push forward that message for a very, very long time.
And Obama partied around with lots of celebrities and lots of entertainers.
It's not hard to believe that there is overlap there amongst other people.
Maybe not to the extent of the Epstein files.
I mean, I'd give it maybe 15%.
But in the end of the day, that many people with Epstein and P. Diddy, that goes to show us that a lot of people, powerful people in power are deranged, disgusting, terrible people.
What do you think, Will?
I mean, I think you're basically right.
There's probably mild overlap.
Not much, I would suspect.
I think it's just different circles and different people attending these parties.
He's probably getting funded by USAID.
I'm a lawyer, so I think about this again.
Why is this lawyer resigning?
I mean, I know people want to say it's like, oh, it's because like Diddy's so disgusting.
And it's like, I'm pretty sure that's not the reason.
One, the guy would have signed on to this case well after a lot of these revelations would have been revealed.
So he knew what he was getting into, too.
You want to be a criminal defense lawyer.
You got to be.
You can't just abandon your client if some bad news about them comes out.
That's a great way to never.
This is big news right here. Right. Well, I mean, this would be a news to do it. But like, you know, say some bad news about them comes out. That's a great way to never – This is big news right here.
Right.
Well, I mean this would be a news to do it like say some bad revelation comes out in the press.
Like imagine your life is on the line.
You're like going to trial over something that's going to put you away forever, and one of your lawyers is like, I can't defend you anymore.
You're disgusting.
How dare you?
Like what?
It's – that would be just contemptible behavior i wouldn't respect
this lawyer if he did that so i think conflict conflict is the thing that makes sense it's
hilarious that the idea of of dropping someone over moral issues is what loses you respect and
that's your job like and it's it's a it's a somebody has to do it right like being a criminal
defense lawyer is perfectly ethical i mean our whole system is built on the idea that people have a right to a criminal defense. So if you're actually going to try and go be a high-profile criminal defense lawyer who represents wealthy people, you better be used to the idea that they might have done something really disgusting, and it's your job to defend them anyway.
Innocent until proven ditty. Wait. Yeah. Well, I mean, John Adams agrees, right?
Yeah.
Right.
Absolutely.
So we just got this breaking news that I want to cut to here.
Zelensky surrenders to Trump and will sign mineral deal within hours.
This is something that we were debating on talking about.
We didn't have any news at the beginning of the show, but Daily Mail is reporting.
Donald Trump appears to have won his trade standoff with Volodymyr Zelensky as the Ukrainian president is set to give in and sign a deal giving the U.S. access to deposits of critical minerals.
The deal was seen as crucial for satisfying Washington's demands for a peace settlement between Ukraine and Russia to end the three-year-long war. It's a staggering surrender from Zelensky, who I had said just days earlier,
I defend Ukraine, I can't sell our country.
I don't know that he's actually selling it.
But Zelensky said on Friday that officials from his country and the U.S.
are working on concluding an economic deal to ensure that the accord worked for and was fair to Kiev.
We're signing an agreement hopefully in the next fairly short period of time.
Trump told reporters in the Oval Office when asked about a deal for Ukraine's minerals.
Do you think that that's because Donald Trump sometimes gets out over his skis?
Do you think that this is one of those cases?
No, no, no, no.
I mean, well, Trump is in a position to kind of dictate terms, right?
Like as we are.
I mean, the Ukrainian defense is overwhelmingly dependent on American funding
and American goodwill.
Yeah.
So, you know, Trump coming in,
and I mean, Zelensky made some real mistakes
over the last few years,
but I don't think there's a bigger one
than deciding to go to Pennsylvania
and effectively campaign for the Democrats.
100% agree.
So, you know, I don't have a lot of sympathy.
And I think I watched, there were some clips,
I think Rubio had an interview with Catherine, uh, Catherine Herridge, actually,
that was on X and Rubio in that interview described how, look,
we thought we had an understanding with Zelensky about the fact that we're
going to work together on this deal. And then we hear him saying like,
I'm not going to sign anything.
And Rubio basically said something along the lines of, well,
that's not very productive for our relationship going forward.
And I think that there must've somebody had a, a talk with Zelensky. That's like,
do you like your job? You know, do you want to keep it? Well, I mean, there's there is an
argument that, you know, Russia's after Zelensky's head. And as long as the United States is is kind
of standing in between Russia and Zelensky, Zelensky gets to keep his head. Right. I think
I think Zelensky might have I saw he might have made a call to the Polish where the Polish
were like, you can't piss off the Americans like this.
Like they're, they are your patron.
You get to, you know, the idea that you get to just operate independently of the Americans,
like that's not your situation.
Sorry, bro.
How much do you think this stems from the personal relationship between Donald Trump
and Zelensky?
There's a good amount of that.
I think that if Zelensky had been more
you know, I think about Netanyahu is a good example
of a comparison, right? Like Trump's
not going to Netanyahu and demanding like
mineral rights in Israel
partially because Netanyahu and
Israel are able to defend themselves a lot more effectively.
But the, you know,
in particular, I think that Zelensky
has just played the global neoliberal
card so aggressively. Like he's like I'm, you know, you know,ky has just played the global neoliberal card so aggressively.
He's just of the left.
And then Donald Trump comes into power and it's like, oh, yeah, maybe this is a reason that countries that are dependent on American aid try not to weigh in on our domestic politics because it goes from one way to another.
And I think at a certain point, you've got to wonder if Zelensky's got to realize he's going to way to another. And, you know, I think at a certain point, you got to wonder if Zelensky,
he's got to realize he's,
he's going to need to resign.
He's going to need to,
you know,
his,
his relationship with Trump is simply not strong enough that they,
the Ukrainians need someone new in there to,
you know,
to have like a fresh,
fresh start in terms of their relationship with the Trump administration.
So this is the first time that I've heard actually anyone articulate that.
Can you expand on it?
Yeah.
So the,
the idea of Zelensky resigning.
Yeah,
no,
I'm seeing a little bit of that. I mean, I don't know that that's ever been discussed officially, but you know, it? Yeah. The idea of Zelensky resigning. Yeah, no, I'm seeing a little bit of that.
I mean, I don't know that that's ever been discussed officially, but if you're running the government of Ukraine right now, you can't be in a position where you have a bad relationship with the United States government.
No way.
It's just not – it makes your position untenable.
Like if you think about sitting in your shoes, imagine – put yourself in the shoes of a Ukrainian voter and what you would want your government to be doing and you if you actually cared about winning this war or cared
about a reasonable settlement which you probably do you don't want to you you don't want to get
screwed over so you'd say well we we just it's whatever the reason and whatever the justice of
your cause vladimir like you can't we can't have you being on bad terms with trump like you just
can't you know i mean we would say the same thing. And if you were thinking
about your own, what you would want is your own leader, you'd want your own leader to be on good
terms with the President of the United States. And so you'd be pissed at him for like, going,
you know, creating this tension with people like Vance and Rubio, you'd be pissed at him for going
off and saying all sorts of nasty stuff. Because you'd be saying to yourself, rationally, the worst
your relationship with Trump is the worst it's going to be for me and my family.
So that's why I think ultimately I suspect Zelensky, I don't think he'll make it through the year.
I think that's my guess.
And I'm not basing that on like any internal knowledge.
I'm just sort of looking at the situation and thinking this is not tenable.
And eventually, you know, top level Ukrainian politicians are going to say to him, like, you need to go, bro.
Like we need we need a fresh start with Trump.
It's crazy to me, like when Trump took office again and we keep talking about economic sanctions and tariffs and you see all of the times that he would level these on other countries,
they would bluster and say, we're not gonna bend the knee. They would eventually
bend the knee. You actually get a glimpse of
just how powerful America could be if it
actually cared about itself.
It's insane to me.
I look at it and I'm just like, do you
know how much more, as powerful
as this country is, how much
more we could take and
do if we actually cared
about our own self-interest.
That is a great point.
And I think that most Americans don't realize because I feel the exact same way.
Like the way that our government has behaved for the past, you know, for 12 of the past 16 years has been as if we could not risk upsetting anyone else.
And the way that Trump exercises power, soft power clearly,
because he's not gotten us into any kind of wars,
and he's made far greater overtures towards peace with our adversaries or with what people that we consider adversaries.
I'm thinking of North Korea specifically.
The things that are possible for the United States really become clear.
And I think that, again, that's a great point because I felt the same way.
I did not I guess I didn't really understand how much soft power the united states
had it's just clear that the u.s can blow up every other country right like that's what i'm saying
that's the difference like whenever we thought of that before we thought it was through might
right like uh but then people make the joke like yeah but you haven't won a war and however many
many decades right that's not the point i have a problem with that but the point being is that look
we're not even talking about intervention of the u.S. military. We're just saying that we're going to slap sanctions on you. We're us, whether it's through trade, whether it's through the use of our military to protect their own borders.
There's a thousand ways in which we could be doing more for our country that we're starting to do now.
And I worry that the second you lose power, then it just goes back to the way it was.
You have to start imparting the idea that our own self-interest is key.
So that's one thing that I want to get your take on.
Well, like I agree completely with what Brett's saying.
And I think that that the idea of America first has been so foreign to American to Americans.
We don't understand the potential that our country has.
And I think that Donald, because we were talking earlier about the MAGA coalition versus the left.
I think that Donald Trump has really demonstrated that the United States can do great things for itself and still operate in a moral and ethical way internationally.
And this is how not just the right, though the right is probably, you know, screaming how much they love it.
But this is the way that the right and the not left should look at the not left, the whoever isn't in the crazy leftist.
These are the way that politicians should act towards the United States.
And I'd really love to hear your thoughts on that. So I think, you know, for a long time, we had on the left, a sort of general globalist
internationalist sense that we shouldn't be rocking the boat, that we should be seeking
consensus, that we should just be doing what everybody else wants. And on the right,
the right had antibodies against that because the right's historically more nationalist,
anti-UN, for example. But the right also has this longstanding free trade approach that would
totally exclude the idea of using tariffs as an economic weapon as a way to get people to do,
serve our interests. And the combination of those two things meant it's like, well,
we have hard power or nothing. And most of the time, it's nothing to get people to behave the
way we want. And Trump comes in, he's like, well, I'm not, I'm obviously not some internationalist
cuck. And then also, like, obviously not. And then, you know, but also that I'm,
I'm not, at the same time, some like, afraid of using tariffs. And so what I'm going to do is I'm
just going to go around and be like, wait a second, you all are completely dependent on access to our
market, your economies are completely dependent on access to American consumers. So guess what,
you get to do what we want, because otherwise, we're gonna we're gonna make your access to American consumers. So guess what? You get to do what we want,
because otherwise we're going to make your access to our consumers painful. And you can't afford
that. And that's just the nature of how having such an incredibly powerful economy here allows
us to exert force abroad and get people to do what we want. I mean, he kind of got into it in
the first term. He's like, well, what has the U.N. or NATO done for us in the last however many decades?
And people maybe just that was the first time anybody thought of asking the question.
Oh, yeah.
What have any of them done for us?
Yeah.
Well, I mean, the NATO is us.
I mean, we spend more than the rest of the NATO countries combined on our military.
Yeah.
That's crazy.
And a lot of them are, you know, deciding to buff up their welfare states and not meet GDP targets.
They're spending as a percentage of GDP targets.
The idea that every NATO country is supposed to spend 2% of their own GDP, right, is I think that's what the agreement is.
The U.S., I just recently learned, only spends 3.6% of our GDP on our military.
That's something that if you tell your average leftist, they're going to be like, no way.
They're going to say, no, we must spend half the money that we the of our GDP on.
We spend so much money on the military and blah, blah, blah.
And whereas we do in absolute dollars, we spend a lot.
But it's because the United States GDP is like twenty nine trillion dollars.
It's just a mind boggling amount of money.
And then to think that we ask, you know like poland and and i poland is i
think is one of the better uh poland meets its targets yeah like they're really they're really
good about it and they spend two percent of their gdp i don't know what poland's gdp is but it's
obviously dramatically less than the united states you know because they're just a smaller country
with fewer people and and so the actual ask of the individual european countries or other countries
in nato in absolute dollars is minuscule compared to what the united states and then they get you
know they really start talking about how we're like being you know uh appeasing i really can't
stand the country countries that are tiny that spend that do not even meet their their target
on nato spending like you know you're tiny in the first place
and you don't even spend 2% of your GDP on your military
and then you're telling us that we're appeasing.
Like, this isn't, I mean, I don't care what you think.
Yeah, it's not even a real conversation.
Like, you're like a chihuahua yapping at us.
Like, you're not a serious country.
Like, you get to, if we start defending you,
you'd fall to Russia in an instant.
So, like, you know, be grateful for the continued support of the American taxpayer, despite the fact that you guys have been obnoxious towards our current sitting president.
I mean, that is a lot of where I think a lot of the leftist arguments come in these days about when you see people, you know, coalescing online and talking about health care and they talk about it in foreign countries.
And we talk about how they say, oh, it's amazing that Americans don't just get free health care.
And then we say, well, that's because your military is pretty much subsidized by the might of our military.
I get that anger.
Like, I do.
I understand that that's a very simplistic argument.
But I do understand the anger from the average American who does think, you know, maybe the hospital, you know, maybe all your medical bills shouldn't cover shouldn't be
covered. But you shouldn't go into insane debt because you broke your arm. And to know that
we're doing that so that we can defend other countries is infuriating on some level. So I
get that argument. Yeah, I do. I think that I think that most of that kind of perspective comes from a lack of understanding of what the actual problem is, because the the idea that, you know, you shouldn't go into, you know, you shouldn't have to go into hock just because you break your arm.
Well, breaking your arm is while it's a bad thing. It's something that modern medicine is very capable of dealing with. And it happens frequently enough where it shouldn't cost
you ten thousand dollars to get your arm x-rayed and set and medically and then you get into
insurance shouldn't be at all you should i mean you can go and get your teeth cleaned from a
dentist for a couple hundred bucks that should probably be 50 bucks because it takes them like
10 minutes nowadays and and that even that is still it's like it's not outrageously expensive to get
your you know spend 150 200 bucks to get your teeth clean it shouldn't be more than a couple
hundred bucks to get an arm set because it's something that's fairly routine and unless they
need to do you know put in you know uh steel and and those kind of repairs go in and they're like
we need to take an x-ray and then like when and then they set your they set them on like we need
to take another x-ray and the poor person's like do you need to do take an x-ray. And then they set the bone, like, we need to take another x-ray.
And the poor person's like, do you need to do the second x-ray?
But the point being is, like, when we talk about, like, plastic surgery or LASIK or those kind of procedures that aren't covered, all of that stuff, the prices have gone down.
And this is where I'm most libertarian.
The market does work.
The market does drive prices down.
It's a miracle that it happens and that it works the way that it does.
But because we don't have a market for health care, all the prices are going to be sky or through the roof because the insurance companies just pay.
It's a nightmare. But that's not because that's not the fault of the the american uh population that's because of the
government well and then the scary part is is they somehow turn that on its head and say that that is
an argument for single-payer health care and then you're like yeah hold up that's insane too yeah um
we're gonna go ahead and move on to the next story here um judge denies bid to block trump administration from placing usa workers on leave
this is being reported by cbs washington a federal judge on friday declined to block the trump
administration from putting thousands of employees with u.s agency for international development on
administrative leave and recalling others from overseas clearing the way for president trump
to resume his efforts to overhaul the agency as part of his plan to slash the size of the federal government.
I do think that it's a good idea to do these things, but I think the real tangible results when it comes to the significant changes of USAID are going to be the fact that the left doesn't get the the doesn't have the access to federal money
the way that it used to yeah no i think i mean so first off this is a big w for the trump
administration yes right like let's let's get that out of the way this was something that
one of the cases where there had been a temporary restraining order put in place
um and you know i'd followed a lot of these cases this judge nichols uh you know i've got a friend
named bill shipley who
is heavily involved with j6 defendants so he actually was in front of judge nichols a lot
and he was saying everybody's getting really mad at judge nichols over this particular
injunction he was like give him a second he's a really good judge like there's a reason i think
we're you're gonna end up winning pretty quickly here and that's what's happened um usaid you know
or these these labor unions try to say it's like well you can't cut
people off from usaid in foreign countries because they need access to like foreign alerts about
danger in their country and he's like well okay i'll give you like five days to demonstrate that
that's true and like that you're actually entitled to like not get fired uh and five days later he's
like nope you're we can fire you actually they they can go ahead and do what they want.
And that's what's happened here.
Do you anticipate that there will be another challenge to this?
No, I think this is going to be the end of this particular case of the U.S.
I think that you've lost your attempt to get an injunction to stop Trump
from putting all of USA basically on administrative leave and telling them all that you get to, you know, you can sit at home for the next six months until your salary until we we finally fire you.
And I just don't think that once this once this ruling's been denied, they're not going to go to a different judge and try and judge stop here.
Like the new judge will look at and be like, you already filed this case in D.C. It's already been resolved. No injunction.
So I think this is just a straight W.
There's a lot of different ones of these injunctions all over the country, Trump administration is and about trying to return the power to the executive and get it away from the bureaucracy.
And that was one of the reasons why he's trying to do the birthright citizenship, because that should go before the Supreme Court.
And that'll really bring the question, does the executive have the authority to fire people that are in the bureaucracy or not? And I wanted to get your thoughts on that. So yeah, I think that the big
case, and I think in the next, and how does probably early next week, because it's Friday,
right? So there's nothing going to happen next two days. But probably Monday, Tuesday, I would
expect the Supreme Court's going to rule on the pretty the case that's before them. I think it's
the first one, which is Trump fired the head of the Office of Special Counsel, I think a guy named Dellinger. Dellinger went to the DC District Court,
got an injunction saying, you need to keep your, you, the Trump administration, are not allowed to
fire this guy. And that went up on appeal, and the DC Circuit Court said, well, it's a temporary
restraining order. We don't meddle with temporary restraining orders, because the being you don't need to appeal them because they're going to expire in 28 days
on their own terms. But the administration has gone to the Supreme Court and said,
no, no, no, no, no. Judges do not get to tell us who to hire and who to fire. And they can't use
temporary restraining orders to deny us the ability to fire people within for a month.
That would be a ridiculous,
that's a ridiculous interference with such an obvious core article to power
that like not even a temporary restraining order
should be allowed to stay in place.
And so that's already at the Supreme Court, right?
Like there's already been briefing.
We're probably gonna hear about that Monday, Tuesday.
I expect the Trump administration is gonna win.
And if they win that,
they might essentially win
a huge knockout to a slew of these temporary restraining orders, basically saying like,
the Supreme Court's either going to, you know, take a wider view of this or just put in some
dicta, basically saying, all these temporary restraining orders have gone wildly beyond the
judge's authority. They need to, people need to stop messing with the executive the executive branch period and stop some some of the things that i've been hearing people
discussing when it comes to this kind of stuff there even when like fdr was making massive
massive executive orders that you know really changed the structure of government there were no
federal judges that were just saying well we're going to throw an injunction on this and stop it
and this is really kind of an innovation that's happened, started, I guess, in the 60s, but really took off in the Barack Obama administration. Can you speak
to that? Yeah. So the idea of a nationwide injunction, it's not obvious at all that
judges should be able to issue injunctions beyond the parties to the litigation directly in front of
them. You know, a good example of this, I think there was, there was a case in Florida where, you know, the, the state of, I think DeSantis was trying to like ban puberty blockers or something.
And they went to sue him and, you know, in federal court, the injunction was crafted so that DeSantis was not, while the case was being resolved, DeSantis was not allowed to prevent these two specific people from getting puberty blockers.
He could enforce the law broadly, but he couldn't enforce it to
them. That's sort of, that's the normal understanding of like, what court, what power
do district courts have? Well, they have power over the litigants in front of them. They can say,
you don't do this to this person until we've settled your dispute. So the idea that an
injunction could be just broad and affect everybody in the country, despite the fact
that not everybody in the country is in front of the court, it's not obvious that that should be
allowed. And especially given how aggressive some of these district court judges have been, I mean,
you know, there was the New York case where Judge Engelmeyer told Doge that they weren't allowed to
access Treasury data. I mean, they were straight up telling, it created this artificial distinction between political and career appointees. And it's like, you, the political
appointees are not allowed to see this data. Like, whoa, what? This is a democracy. The political
appointees are the people who are appointed by the elected president of the United States. The
civil servants do not have some, you know, bestowed grant of authority from our government.
So that was bizarre. There's been so many bizarre ones.
And I think in general, what you're going to see, I mean, I know Justice Thomas has talked about
tailoring these down. And basically, you know, way too many judges are getting way too quickly
involved in the working as the executive branch. I think that it's time for that to stop. I think
it's personally time for this as a normative claim. And I think it will stop. Is that just is that where I hear so much about the term and the concept of activist judges now?
Is that just because it's all become so heavily politicized? Like I've heard a lot of people
discuss about the the idea of the Supreme Court wasn't always seen as something that was politically
biased, but rather something that was just supposed to be about interpreting the Constitution.
Now you expect most of these cases a lot of the time to fall along party lines.
Well, generally, yes.
I mean, I'm probably biased in my assumption, but I do think that the argument that the conservatives or the textualists are the ones that are correct in their understanding.
You can't you have to go by what the words on the paper mean and you can't infer meaning. So even though it's the conservatives that are the argument is is the constitution is meant to be
interpreted and so the meaning will change but i find like there's arguments made by like judge
napolitano that said napolitano that says things like if the if the constitution mean if it doesn't
mean what it says then it doesn't mean anything it either means what it says or it doesn't and
if it doesn't mean what it says then it doesn't. And if it doesn't mean what it says, then it doesn't mean anything at all. Or things like if the Constitution was meant to be interpreted, then they would not.
The framers would not have put an amendment process into the Constitution that is not only there.
So that way you can change it, but is arduous is because they didn't want you to just change the meaning of the words on the paper based on what is popular at the time.
I guess I just think of it from a it's from a media framing device, which is that we talk about Soros backed DAs or Obama appointed judges or Trump appointed judges, which is a tool that both sides of the ais' friendly media apparatus uses as a way to frame their arguments when they're covering a story.
I just want to – like you've actually sort of landed on a very interesting, bigger debate in American constitutional law and the question of like should – it almost goes to like should we even allow judicial review?
That's not an obvious – we treat it as obvious that our supreme court can weigh in on the constitutionality of laws passed by congress
and can overturn them it's not obvious that you have to allow that to happen right you can just
say that the all the court's job can always only to um you know interpret the laws passed by
congress and then see if people's behavior conforms to it uh but you so and then the and
then that connects to the question you're also talking about,
which is like, okay, when exactly did judicial activism start and what is judicial activism?
That's, you know, query whether or not like some of our most famous cases that most people would
think of as the best cases the Supreme Court has ever decided weren't in fact very activist.
So Brown versus Board is a sort of classic example of this where, you know, there's 80
years of precedent saying separate but equal is OK.
And the court just decided, nah, change your mind.
And was it super principled in terms of like if you read the legal reasoning or you're like, man, this is just a masterpiece of legal reasoning.
Nobody could poke any holes in their argument here.
No, you could poke some holes in how they got from – how they just threw out 80 years of precedent.
But I think nobody wants to see Brown versus Board of Education overturned.
We all agree that, you know, racial discrimination is bad.
So it's reflective of society at the time.
It can be.
I mean, you know, these things are, there's, you know, I think conservatives always want,
I think, and I'm sympathetic to this, the idea that it's all, you want it to be black
and white, but the project of interpreting text and understanding meaning is there's always some amount of gray.
Like language is not computer code.
It's not perfect.
And I think in general, the idea of the conservatives have the better of the argument that in a world where you completely go to language is totally indeterminate and it can just mean whatever we want it to mean.
Then basically you're saying that there is no constitution and it's just a pure exercise of power.
I don't think that's right.
But I think that, you know, we, you know, we shouldn't overstate the extent to which
the, this is actually a black and white problem consistently.
Yeah.
And to your, to your discussion about, about it's just a language, it doesn't matter.
It's just an exercise of power.
That is kind of the, the, the furthest postmodernist leftist.
That's a fundamental belief that they have,
that there is no, like that discourses are only an exercise of power,
that the words that you say don't really mean anything.
And that's actually where the foundation for the, you know,
everyone's a Nazi kind of comes from the
important thing isn't whether or not they're nazis the important thing is do you convince
the people listening that they're bad people so you use whatever hyperbole that you want and these
are arguments that are made by people i think it was like folk fuko and and chart uh sartre and
stuff like that that that it doesn't matter what you're saying, just that
you're convincing the people listening.
It's really easy to understand why that tactic became so popular as phones became more commonplace
and our communication went digital, which was that those bludgeoning arguments of name
calling and categorizing you as something abhorrent became far more tactical when everyone was now connected via
social media and they could use that as a way of silencing people they disagreed with because
people weren't used to having those types of things hurled at them by people they didn't know
i think that there's a lot of i don't think you're wrong i wouldn't i wouldn't disagree but i think
there's a lot to it because these ideas like i said like the the post-modern kind of left kind of got their start, you know, in the like the 60s, like late 50s, early 60s and stuff.
Well, 50s and 60s.
Well, now you have, you know, you have your academics and your students who go to your four year colleges and have years of indoctrination into those beliefs, arguing online with somebody who works at an auto body shop and they think that those tactics of
sounding unbelievably erudite while insulting you are going to work forever but we're seeing that
that's less and less true now as those kind of arguments hold less weight yeah well i mean as
long as as long as people when you're first when you're first called a nazi it's shocking
because you're like what how do you get there i'm not and then you start
people start they they second guess themselves they're like am i have i done anything like that
have i ever said and it's like you have to you kind of take stock of yourself but the more you
read the more you hear it the more you get called it when you know that you you know you've never
zeig to heil you know you're just like that's not true at all like there's there's nothing that i
have ever done that even remotely resembles that so you're just saying this and then you then people kind of get
used to it and that's kind of what's happened people like they know that they're not nazis
people know that they're not actually bigoted and so when someone calls you bigoted when you know
you're not you're just like i know that i'm not you know cudgel works on the most the ones who
are the least self-assured right so it works on somebody who isn't sure of who they are or at the very least has a very
deep fear of what others think of them.
What's the, uh, the use of dismantling language?
Maybe we'll, you might know as you know, they make words don't mean anything anymore.
Maybe does it go to the constitution?
It's so it, you know, allows you to kind of do whatever you normally want to in terms
of law, right?
So that's the first – the power of if you can basically win that all language is totally indeterminate and that then really law just becomes an exercise of power.
There's no principle basis on which to say like you can or can't do anything.
And I mean the left prefers that because it believes in what's so-called like living constitutionalism.
I think this is what you were getting at
with a lot of your kind of,
you know, the critique of interpretation.
But, you know, the left really doesn't want
to be constrained by the past understandings
and past written texts.
They just want, you know,
they want to go towards, you know.
Is that like when they talk about
well-regulated militia
in regards to the Second Amendment when they understand that's not what they meant? They weren't talking about the government regulating things because now the government regulations, like the way that we think of the administrative state, when you think of regulation, you think of the bureaucracy deciding laws, making rules.
That's not what well-regulated –
The key thing there is it's about how does that clause operate grammatically.
OK.
So the clause is a well-regulated militia being necessary to a free people,
something like that. The right to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed.
You know, this is a good example of where English is actually not indeterminate.
That phrase is a prefatory phrase that is basically saying the way that sentence reads
properly is the right to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed and here's a really good reason why but it's not saying this is if you know this is the only reason why and this is therefore the
only purpose for which bearing arms is acceptable no that's not the right way to read that english
and so so would it have been easier if they just didn't give any reason and just said the
right yeah well they they didn't assume that i mean it's pretty clear actually i mean my
understanding of you know the history of the Second Amendment, they understand exactly what they were doing.
I mean there's a lot of like really cruddy Second Amendment arguments that the left puts out there, things like, well, they only had muskets back then.
So like you can only have muskets now.
It's like muskets were state-of-the-art, right?
They were basically saying that the Sednari should have state-of-the-art weaponry. You know, and I mean, there are obviously like some limits on that.
But there's a whole slew of terrible left-wing arguments.
But the worst of them is sort of seizing on this prefatory clause and then just butchering not only English grammar when the thing was written, but English grammar now. Have you ever seen the meme where it's
like women, if they go back,
if they had a time machine, men, if they had a time machine,
and the men went, it's like, write it as if
they're two. Write the
Second Amendment as if they were five
years old. We're going to
go ahead and we're going to jump to one last story,
and it's a light one
to end the week.
Israel Hamas swapped to go ahead despite claim child hostages were killed with bare hands.
So the ceasefire deal still on track amid uproar over fate of two Israeli boys and false return of their mother's bodies.
So this is a situation that I find particularly disgusting,
and it's something that people seem to ignore
when they're talking about the Israel-Palestine argument,
if they're sympathetic to the Palestinian side.
So from The Guardian,
Israelis and Palestinians are bracing for another tense exchange of hostages, prisoners, and detainees on Saturday after uproaring Israel over allegations that two child hostages were brutally murdered by Hamas and the group's failure to deliver the body of their mother, instead turning the corpse of an unidentified woman.
That is crazy. The Israeli Defense Force said in a statement on Friday afternoon that autopsy results and military intelligence concluded that members of Hamas used their bare hands to kill Ariel Baez IV and his 10-month-old brother Kiefer when they were seized in October 2023.
If I understand correctly, there's actually no evidence that these kids and their mother were actually seized by Hamas.
They were...
There's some idea that they were seized
by Gazan civilians.
That's what I've been hearing. Because they don't wear
uniforms, which, I mean, whether you
think that the... Except when they're handing them over
in these ceremonies. Then they
somehow find their uniforms. Crazy, right? I wonder
where they went. Maybe it'd make it easier to
identify who's a military and who's a civilian if they
would wear them during conflict.
Well, you know, the Geneva suggestions are just that, apparently.
But they don't wear, you know, they weren't wearing, on October 7th, they weren't wearing,
you know, military garb.
They weren't wearing uniforms.
And there's a lot of people that would make the argument that there were a lot of Palestinians
that just went into Israel and were kidnapping people.
And I find it difficult to disprove that theory, again, because they weren't wearing, you know, they weren't wearing uniforms.
So you can't really prove that there is a distinction.
And that's something that I find I find difficult to parse out generally.
There are people that say, oh, well, you know, not everyone in Gaza is Hamas, sure.
But I think they had like 70% approval rating or something like that in a poll or something.
So where's the Gazan Oscar Schindler, right? Where is the Gazan?
You know, there have been hundreds of, it's been a year and a half it's not like also hamas is not as powerful
as the nazi regime was in germany right like hamas got got their ass kicked very quickly um i want to
just just for a point i want to articulate that in germany there were germ Germans that saved Jews. In Gaza, there were no Gazans that saved Jews.
Yeah.
So in Nazi Germany, there were Germans that were protecting Jews and hiding Jews in Nazi Germany.
There are no Gazans that were protecting Jews.
In fact, there were Gazans that were considered Gazan civilians that went into Israel and kidnapped Jews.
This is my ignorance for the situation.
In Germany,
Jewish folks lived inside the city
of where Germany was, with the
Germans. They were German
too. German Jews. Right, but I'm just saying
yes. But also, I don't know of any,
I have not heard of Israelis living
in Gaza. I feel like it's out the window.
Zero. Right. You know why it is?
So there's no... Israelis literally
ripped, the Israeli government
ripped Israeli citizens from
their homes and their settlements in the
Gaza Strip in 2005.
They made the Gazan Strip free of Jews.
Well, that's why there's no
Gazan Schindler's List, because
there was no one living there at the time.
Yeah, it's just like it's a place where
they're working. And I think you're right.
Actually, that's a good point, right?
The people of Gaza don't have any day-to-day interactions
with Israelis unless they were among the few
who were getting work permits to go work on the strip.
So you just have no relationship
and no sort of empathy
because there's none of that cross-cultural interaction.
And I think that that probably is a good explanation for whereas, you know,
not everybody in Germany agreed with Hitler, and certainly there were plenty of German Jews.
There were plenty of Jews just living in Germany prior to Hitler that Germans would have been interacting with.
So that's the point that folks are saying online.
Nothing to feel is mute, that you can't just say that anymore.
And there was also in the
in the background of this or during this there was a i think there were three buses that exploded in
in israel six oh six buses yeah six that they designed to kill they i mean we are very everybody's
very lucky that they went you know no somehow nobody nobody died. Oh, good. Despite like, and very could have easily been mass casualty events.
Yeah, and this is also, I mean, I was just in Israel, just like full disclosure.
I was in there for about a week and, you know, never had any security issues myself.
But the big discussions have been all about these hostage release deals and where, you know, Israel's giving up 30 or something prisoners for every one hostage
they're getting back. And a lot of these prisoners are convicted criminals, people who were used to
be involved in bus bombings back in like the second Intifada in like 2000, or any even more
recently. And all of a sudden, you know, after Israel has now released something like 1000 of
these convicted criminals, all of a sudden buses are blowing up again. Like not, you know, I'm a, I'm a fan of Israel, but I got to say, and, and, you know,
I really don't like the hostage deals they've been doing. I think they've been really too,
a little bit too cavalier about, uh, the future consequences of releasing these criminals,
like that their own citizen, a lot of their own citizens are going to die or be taken captive in
the future by some of the people that they're releasing. Are they releasing them into the city
or are they sending them?
Some of them are getting released into the West Bank.
Some of them are getting released into Gaza.
Okay.
Do you have a sense that, I mean, obviously Gaza has been basically leveled.
I don't know exactly how many cities there were in Gaza.
I think there were two major cities in Gaza, right?
Three.
Three.
I mean, Gaza City is the dominant population center,
but then there's Khan Yunus and Rafah in the other south.
And I know Rafah got really destroyed.
Yeah.
That was kind of the final stand.
People forget.
I mean, Israel is really small, and the Gaza Strip is even smaller.
Size of New Jersey, right?
Israel might be the size of New Jersey.
The Gaza Strip is the size of Las Vegas.
Oh, wow.
That's it.
You know, Las Vegas is a big town.
Yeah.
Right?
Like, there's downtown, and there's a strip, right? But, like,, not in Las Vegas is a big town. Yeah. Right. Like there's downtown and there's a strip. Right.
But like still not that big. So, you know, I mean, we're talking 50 by eight square miles or something.
Is it your sense that the Donald Trump is has been talking about some some very novel ideas of how to solve the issues going on in Gaza. Is it your sense that the that kind of kind of approach is
something that the first of all, that would would produce positive results? And second of all,
is it something that that the world is ready for? I mean, I think the world whether the world's
ready for or not, it's happening. And I think the what it what it has done, I mean,
Trump basically saying, you know, he was basically being boxed in by the people.
They're like, well, you know, Israel won't take this over and nobody will stand for it. And so,
you know, your only option here is basically like take the Palestinian Authority that's in
charge in the West Bank. You can put them in charge of Gaza. That's it. That's really your
only option here. Trump's like, well, don't they suck too? And everybody's like, oh yeah,
oh yeah, they really suck. Trust me. The Palestinian Authority is not cool.
They might be like less radical than Hamas, but they still give like annuities to people who've blown up Israeli civilians.
That's like blow up an Israeli civilian in a terrorist attack.
You get rewarded by the government of the Palestinian Authority.
So these people – and they're notoriously corrupt too as often Arab governments are because, I mean, we can get into the reason why.
Are they as – do they do the bidding of Iran the same way that –
No.
No, they have the –
Hezbollah and –
I wouldn't say so.
I wouldn't even say Hamas really does the bidding of Iran.
They're sort of – they've always operated more independently.
Hezbollah does a lot more – is a lot more directly tied to Iran.
Hamas is more just supported by them.
And Hamas surprised everybody with 10-7.
That's something else.
But basically, but getting back to Trump, well, Trump is like, well, that's stupid.
And moreover, none of this is sufficiently deterring this in the future.
So here's the new plan.
We're just going to take it over.
It'll be ours now.
And all the Palestinians get to leave.
Right?
And it's like a new anchor. And it's basically saying
what it really is saying is to all these Arab countries, it's like, your solutions suck. And
I'm not accepting them. And unless you can come up with a solution that effectively resolves the
Israeli security concerns, and is not some like, oh, we're going to put the PA in charge, like
that, that wouldn't last. If you can't come up with something, then we will solve this problem for you.
And we will just – we will kick everybody out and we will take over and put beautiful hotels in a military base in Gaza.
And send them to Egypt and send them to Jordan.
Yeah.
I mean I talked with some people.
One of them had a really funny idea.
He's like, I really believe in the right of return for Gazans.
Their name – half the people in Gaza are named – have a last name of Al-Masri,
the Egyptian.
Others have Al-Hijazi,
the Saudi,
or,
you know,
you name it.
It's like the idea being that they can all,
they should all go home to their, their places of origin.
That would be just fine.
The,
the,
so the Egyptians have been,
they're not interested in taking the Palestinians.
The Jordanians are not interested in taking the Palestinians because I know that there was some kind of uprising attempted in Jordan, right?
Well, I mean, historically, the Palestinians have been a major source of instability in both countries, particularly in Jordan.
They tried to assassinate, you know, the PLO when they were there.
I mean, we're talking about all the 80s, 70s, 80s.
They were like trying to assassinate the king of Jordan.
I think that's right.
But they've they tried to rebel against the jordanian government isn't the the for the queen of
jordan isn't she palestinian i think she is she's she's certainly sympathetic to them um but i i get
it i'm actually a little more sympathetic to the egyptians and the jordanians than maybe
maybe not the egyptians because they did allow all those weapons to go into gaza and then they're
like oh me you know uh but you know they, me? But this is a radicalized population.
As I think we articulated at the beginning of the segment,
there's a lot less distinction between Hamas and the Gazan population at large
than people try to articulate.
This isn't like ISIS just randomly coming in
and not having a serious amount of domestic support.
The people of Gaza support Hamas by and large.
So I send that to the by and large. So, you know,
there is, I sent that to the Egyptians and Jordanians not wanting an additional like Sunni Islamist, you know, population in their country to like destabilize their own countries. I get that.
But guess what, like some, you're going to have to take some people, I think, probably.
And assuming we go there, or again, you're going to have to figure out a way to solve the underlying problem in Gaza in a way that satisfies the Israeli
security concerns, which are substantial. It's not going to happen. I mean, the argument, I,
I find the argument compelling that if the, I think it was, it might've been Hugh Hewitt that
said this, but he said, if the, if the, if the Gazans put down their weapons or Hamas puts down
their weapons, then there'll be peace. And if the, if the Israelis put down their weapons or if Hamas puts down their weapons, then there will be peace.
And if the Israelis put down their weapons, there's going to be a lot of dead Jews.
Yeah.
And the thing that really is interesting is the way that the West kind of projects its own way of viewing the world onto and saying that the people in Gaza and the West Bank think the same way or should think the same way.
Like they just want a state.
No.
No, they don't.
They want Israel gone. Yeah. That's their goal. They want israel gone they think it's a stain on their honor that's
exactly what from the river to the sea means and you can hear that saying it they're like how clear
could they be like they're like you know it's like even when they tell you we we want to get
rid of israel we want the jews gone oh they just mean they want their own national aspirations
remember do you remember the beak do you remember the beak the beak Do you remember Dabiq? Dabiq? When ISIS was actually a real power, they had their magazine they were putting out.
It was called Dabiq.
And they had an article called Why We Hate You and Why We Fight You.
And it literally went through all the reasons why the Sunni or the Shia, no, the Sunni Islamist hated people that were not Muslims, right?
And it was very clear.
It was all the, it was your, because you're unbelievers, because God says we got to kill you,
like straight down the list.
And Barack Obama was still making the argument.
And this is to your point about like the West projects their ideas on.
Barack Obama was making the argument, well, no, it's economics.
They're doing this because they don't have iPhones
and they don't have modern things.
It's like, no, they literally put out a magazine
with better copy editing than your average New York Times
and they were straight up saying,
hey, this is what, it's called this is why we hate you
and this is why we fight you.
And we should just have the seriousness
and the respect for them to take them at their word.
Just take them at their word that this is what they want and stop saying that what they want is just a side-by-side state.
They don't.
That's not what they want.
And that's like uniform both in the West Bank and in Gaza and say – I mean there are solutions here.
I'm actually – I've listened to some people have some pretty interesting ideas about what to do about the West Bank too, which was, you know, the idea being that the Middle East is sort of has three different forces kind of pulling it in different directions.
Islam, tribalism, and modernity.
And tribalism is an important thing.
It actually kind of explains the origin of Islam because, you know, tribalism emerges because there's not a lot of water in the Middle East. So individualism doesn't work. You need to have a tribe. You need to have
a clan. You need to be loyal to the clan. And so there's a lot of, you know, there's on the one
hand, a lot of internal support, but also that's where, you know, inbreeding in the Muslim world
comes from. It's actually not a phenomenon of Islam. It's a phenomenon of the underlying
tribalism. Islam is actually supposed to be the corrective to that because it was like Muhammad who was saying things like,
you should marry from afar.
You should marry outside the clan.
And also like we should all be coming together
underneath the banner of Allah
rather than constantly fighting with each other
over water sources.
And that, you know, talking about it,
really wildly oversimplifying history of the Arab world.
But basically like because Islam managed to like unifyify tribes get them to stop fighting each other deal with inbreeding uh and and tamp down blood feuds it was able to unite a lot of people and
then swallow up a huge part of the arab world but anyway so but it hasn't like the tribalism
hasn't gone away it's still a thing and so you know when you're trying to explain the middle
east like why are certain countries peaceful and why are they not? You might say, oh, well,
some of them have oil and some of them are wealthy. It's like, no, Iraq has tons of oil.
So does Syria. So does Iran. They're dysfunctional basket cases. Dubai doesn't have any oil. Dubai is
super wealthy and powerful despite not having any. What it is, stable tribalism. It's like families that are – Saudi Arabia is Saudi Arabia owned by the Saud family.
The Emirates are united Arab Emirates owned by individual families and tribes that work together in concert.
Kuwait owned by a family.
Bahrain, Qatar.
Everywhere that's stable in the Middle East has like a stable tribal sovereignty.
Thus, this guy's solution, he said, Palestinian emirates.
There should be an emirate of Ramallah, one of the cities, an emirate of Hebron, an emirate of Bethlehem, an emirate of Jenin.
Like you have small little areas that are run by like with – by a – you know, essentially put the family family in charge and then they own it and they can run it and keep it stable.
And you avoid all the sectarian because the thing is, one thing people don't realize if there were in fact a Palestinian state for like of all the area of the West Bank with all these different cities in it.
The only thing that would unify it is hostility to Israel. And so it's a recipe for endless war. Because the moment if they, you know,
other than that, they all be fighting amongst
each other with their own regional and
sectarian biases against each other. And so
it would just like, the only way to glue
the state of Palestine together is
you know, trying to
common enemy. Okay. You know, this
is also why like, why did Assad,
why is Assad so historically
anti-Israel in Syria well he leads
this podge podge of the Alawites and the Druze and the Sunnis and the Shias and the only way you
could get everybody to stick together is be like those Jews they suck um and so that yeah I mean
so that's you know that's like a sort of long that's a the short form explanation of why like
the two-state solution isn't one many reasons why the two-state solution is bad.
It doesn't account for tribalism.
It doesn't account for the clan structure of families in the region.
And, you know, a better idea would be many, many smaller statelets, little emirates.
City-states, like, yeah.
Thank you.
I had no idea about any of that.
So now it makes a lot of sense.
Yeah, I didn't either until two weeks ago. And then I listened to a guy explain it. So now it makes a lot of sense. Yeah, I didn't either until two weeks ago.
And then I listened to a guy explain it to me and it made a lot of sense to me.
All right.
Well, I think we're going to go ahead and go on over to Super Chats.
We're going to end on a positive note like there.
So smash the like button, share the show with your friends,
and head on over to TimCast.com and join our Discord.
We're not doing an after show tonight,
but you can call in
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If you're a member of the Discord, you can
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Maybe you'll start a podcast.
Who knows?
There's a lot of great things
that happen over in the Discord,
so go on over and
join up.
Opportunities abound. They are um alpha turkey says well well maine governor got nuked so glad we have a president with big
cojones one month in and i barely feel like we can keep up i agree it was and that was one of
the things that even though i didn't mention that was one of the things that i was thinking about
when we were talking about how the president will you know he will assert himself
and for people that don't know donald trump and the main governor got into a disagreement today
about federal funding actually it was about um trans women so boys on girls sports teams
donald trump had said hey you know're going to have to stop doing this.
And the Maine governor said, well, we'll see you in court.
And he's like, well, if you see us in court, we're not going to give you any federal funding.
So you're going to do it.
And I know that Maine isn't all that blue.
It's actually kind of purple.
So I think you lose.
And honestly, if I understand correctly, some of the analysts that I've been listening to
were saying that it is an 80-20 topic in Maine.
80% of the people don't like young boys that are dressed as girls on girls' sports teams.
I think that's generally kind of the split in the U.S.
Most of the people are kind of like, you know, even if you decide you want to go live your life and maybe i'll call you she you still can't play sports with the girls um so there's your backstory for
that one um let's see here what else do we got whiskey drinkers says hey phil and crew i was
hoping to get a shout out for heroes never alone a 501c3 out of legionnaire pa a good place to move
without west virginia 1099 BS.
Thanks for all you guys do.
We love you.
Cheers.
Thank you very much.
And there's your shout out.
There you go.
There you go.
Common Sense Fishing says,
I just busted a gut laughing hearing Phil smirk
when saying Ray Stanley will be in the members area
like he's but nobody.
Quickly followed up by a junior i that's kind of what he
said or that's what the super chat says i know it's kind of tough like like youtube is is real
finicky when it comes to the typing so um so shout out uh common sense fishing i think so yeah shut
out man sometimes there's character limits depending on how much the super chat it's very
tricky you gotta figure out a way to fit everything you want to say in there.
And also it'll finish it for you, but it doesn't do it like other spell checks does.
It's kind of difficult.
The hardest part for me when we're doing the show is reading the articles
because I suck at reading out loud.
Doubly as hard when it's reading the super chats.
Super chats, yeah.
Because you've got to kind of know what they're saying.
You can't just robotically read it.
Yeah, yeah.
You never know what somebody's going to say to you.
You'll get halfway through.
That happens.
No, it happens.
That happens to Mary a lot of times.
She'll just go,
I'm not reading that.
No, she's good at not falling into the trap, right?
Otherwise, somebody's going to get you
to say something awful.
Right, Ro.
So YouTube just crashed,
so we're reloading here.
Give us a second.
Let's see.
Let's see here.
Zach Yandel says,
Brett, your lie in April on Hulu recent discovery.
What?
Read it again.
It literally says,
Brett, your lie in April on Hulu recent discovery.
And it's your as in possessive, not you are.
Oh, so it's a show or a movie.
Oh, okay.
I'll have to.
Let's go.
Okay, let's go.
I'll have to check it out.
You should go check out Reacher season three,
which is very, very good.
Season three?
Okay.
Yep, much, much better at its start than season two was,
even if Alan Richson is kind of a TDS-suffering lunatic.
That's okay.
I'd go watch The Agency.
You guys haven't seen that one?
The Showtime?
Yeah, that's a little bit too cerebral.
I mean, it's Michael Fassbender, right?
Yeah, it's Michael Fassbender.
I get into it, and I'm like,
I don't care about the mental health of spies.
I just want to see him blow shit up.
I just want to see him, you know,
like, let's find a middle ground here.
Like, I don't want to watch a spy go to therapy.
Can he go in a car chase after he gets out of therapy?
Or get in a car chase getting to therapy and he runs in the office and he's like, okay, now I'm safe.
Gets in a gunfight on the way to the therapist.
That I'm okay with.
Yeah.
Therapist is like, tell me about your day.
Tommy K.
Tomek says the FBI should halt all
flights scheduled by people on the list
what list?
must be talking about the Epstein
oh the Epstein list okay yeah there you go
or on the Diddy list yeah I mean that depends
with the way flights are going these days
I feel like they should just be arrested like can we start with
like I don't know I'm just like
gonna throw out there that maybe the people who
sex traffic children should you know the consequences should be more substantial than awkwardness.
Then you can't fly across the country.
Herp walks abound.
No, they're like that or you have to fly one of those Endeavor Air flights.
Or Spirit.
Yeah.
Imagine if that was the way that, like, our government resolved this problem.
They're like, okay, we found you guilty of flying to go have sex with children.
The solution is this, is you're not allowed to fly anymore.
No, it's like nothing but
flights from women. Yeah, it's all
just unmanned flights. The Endeavor
Air, Endeavor Air. Right, you have to go
on those flights. All women
Endeavor Air.
They would actually have hashtag
unmanned because there was an all-woman
crew, which is cringe, but
typical of feminists and stuff.
It's hard.
Common Sense Fishing says,
the way politicians flip-flop like fish,
I don't trust anyone who hasn't been America first from the get-go.
Even before Trump showed up, like Ron and Rand Paul,
they're all swamp creatures, nearly all.
I mean, you do have to give some grace to politicians that have turned things around and have stood,
stood by their convictions since then.
Right.
I,
from what I understand,
JD Vance had some stances early on in his career that didn't necessarily
like Trump in the 2016 primary.
The point is kind of more to,
if the ideas that you're promulgating are good for the country and they're
held by a lot of people, you want to get the politicians to go to work for you and your views.
I don't go to politicians or actors for honesty.
I go to them because either you're making a piece of art that I want to consume or you're potentially in charge of helping put forth laws and ideas that I want to see come forward.
And in that case, I don't know the person.
I don't know whether they honestly believe that,
but it's about making sure that the views that the movement are pushing
are the ones that are popular because they're the ones that they're going to go with.
I don't look to them for integrity.
If the option is a politician with integrity that I disagree with
or a politician that's going to lie about
what he believes, but still going to do the things that I like, I'm going to go with the
guy that's going to lie and do the things that I like.
And that is more likely to be the case, even for the ones that are going to do things that
you don't like.
You're more than likely going to get one void of integrity going against you or for you.
Very rarely do you get a politician with integrity and there's one
thing that i want to say on this like and we talk about it fairly regularly on here like it's easy
for us as pundits or or people that are on the internet talking about politics and stuff it's
easy for us to get wrapped up in this is what i want it's got to be this way but you got to
remember congress the republicans only have a two two seat majority in the House and they only have like a one seat majority sometimes in the Senate.
And that means that you have to deal with the opposing party to get them to vote with you.
Like how the sausage is made sucks. But this is the system that we live in.
And it's real easy for us to say we want this and we want that.
And if we don't get it, then we're going to primary this guy and blah, blah, blah.
But that doesn't mean that the next guy is going to have a different circumstance if the split in the House or the Senate remains the same.
This is sort of my, you know, we at the Article 3 project have been pretty hard on a lot of senators and we did a lot of bullying, which I'm very proud of.
It's always proper to bully senators and Congress people.
Especially like to get, you know, President Trump's nominees confirmed. But I do have a view
that is, and I think, especially, you should let Susan Collins do what she wants. That's the view.
Why is that? Because Susan Collins is as good as we're going to get in Maine. We're not going to
get a better, you know, the alternative to Susan Collins is a Democrat who votes with us 0% of the
time. Susan Collins voting with us half the time is gravy it's why the democrats were
so stupid when they complained about joe mansion constantly like joe mansion's from here he's a
west virginian yeah yeah you're lucky you get you know west virginia went 70 for trump you're lucky
you get any votes ever and you should be grateful every day that joe mansion doesn't just decide to
switch parties and tell you to screw yourself Yeah. And the difference is kind of that the Republicans look at that as somebody who's voting to support what his constituents want, whereas the left sees it as somebody who's not obeying their rules.
Yeah. And I agree with you both totally.
And it's I just think that it's important for or it's it's incumbent on us to remind people that there are realities that we're dealing with.
And whereas we're going to like I said, we're going to sit here and pontificate and we're going to say we want this and we wish this and we think this.
That doesn't mean that that changes anything in Washington.
And the realities on the ground are always going to be the realities on the ground if we can get two-thirds of the house and then a 75 you know 75 seats
in the senate then let's go do everything we want you know go make all like repeal everything get
rid of all the stuff we can get rid of that sounds awesome to me and i'm all for it but considering
we don't have that kind of majority there are limitations as to what we can do and if you're
if we end up with two big bills like they're
talking about it's better to have the stuff that you want and a bunch of garbage that you don't
want then have nothing at all and that's your option a bunch of garbage to get the other people
to vote for it or else you don't get a bill that you like at all so um on the jd vansting um uh
casual fishing uh is correct i mean he he could have been. He's a Marine.
He's from the Appalachian.
He could have loved America his whole life.
It didn't mean he was America first just because he judged Trump in a certain way.
So, like, he could have, you know, he said what he said about Trump.
He had his thoughts, but maybe in the back of his mind, a lot of people still loved this country, still wanted to serve this country.
So I give respect to that part.
Absolutely.
So we're going to go ahead and read some more Super Chats.
Shane H. Wilder says,
One thing I noticed MSM not covering is the 70 Christian martyrs beheaded by ISIS-linked terrorists in the Congo in the Kasanga Massacre.
I did not know about this at all.
Is that recent?
I assume so.
How do you spell that?
K-A-S-K?
K-A-S-K.
Oh, Kasinga Church Massacre?
Things that happen in Africa frequently get ignored unless it's North Africa.
And they don't like to talk about any form of persecution that Christians face ever.
Oh, yes.
That's true.
That goes against the Marxist left wing view in America.
Which kind of speaks to the conversation we were having earlier.
Like, even in the Big Tent Maga movement, you do have people that are, even if they aren't true believers, they're fond of Christianity, of religion.
You know, they're not hostile to it, which is obviously far much better.
You know, this is, and it also connects to sort of the broader Israel point.
Like, Israel is a lot more friendly to Christianity than its neighbors are.
Yeah.
A lot more.
Yeah.
You know, I spoke with a lot of, I could go in detail on this, but I spoke with a number
of, actually a couple of Palestinian Christians who came to speak with us and they had really,
really interesting stories about, you know, like one of them was involved in like a sort of kind of palestinian
like not terror group but a palestinian activist group and he thought like he had his friends and
then one day uh like one of these islamists kidnapped his sister and brought him back to
brought him back to a different city and he and he knew the people in there and he went there went
to the city he's like hey guys like i've been working with you all this time i'm with you in
this activist group like can you can i get my there, went to the city and he's like, Hey guys, like I've been working with you all this time. I'm with you in this activist group.
Like,
can you,
can I get my sister out please?
Thank you.
Uh,
and they're like,
you're,
you're Christian.
There's nothing for you here.
Like at all,
you know,
like,
and,
and that's,
that gets to that point I was making about like,
there's an underlying tribalism and sectarianism in Arab,
in a lot of Arab culture that like,
Oh,
you're not,
you're not our religion.
Well,
you're not us.
So, you know, Oh, your, your sister got kidnapped. That's too bad that like, oh, you're not our religion? Well, you're not us. So, you know,
oh, your sister got kidnapped? That's too bad. Like, sucks for you. Not our problem.
I mean, that's, you know, and then you compare that to like what they get in Israel where,
yeah, the Christians are definitely a minority in Israel, obviously. You know, and really what
they're fighting for is to not be treated under the Arab rubric because there's the Jewish rubric and the Arab rubric that are
sort of settled in because those are the much bigger populations.
And there's fights that the Christians are having to be like, no, no, no, we're different
from both.
Like, we want Christian education.
We want our kids to be brought up Christian.
And the Israeli government's like, yeah, OK, sure.
Yeah.
Tyrant God says, I found out in France you have to have a suppressor by law if you own a firearm.
Your safety of the public.
The only reason why they are heavily regulated in the U.S. is control.
Rock on, Phil.
Cheers.
You're totally right.
And it's not just France.
There's multiple places in Europe where a suppressor is actually mandatory.
How polite.
How polite.
It is polite. It is polite.
It is.
I mean, if you put a can on a rifle, especially like a medium cartridge, like a 5.56 or whatever,
it's still got a loud snap when you're shooting it,
but it's totally different than shooting that same rifle without any hearing protection and without a can.
Man, it's one time when i when i
first started shooting rifles one time i went to the range and i forgot my ear pro and i was like
oh i'm gonna go ahead and shoot anyways i shot one round no the hell i'm not yeah it was when i
lived in massachusetts it was a 40 minute drive to the range it was a 40 minute drive home and it
sucked but i was not shooting anymore because man that rings your bell yeah no i've i don't shoot often but i think i got invited to go to
a shooting range once and it was the first time i'd gone shooting in like 20 years and i go there
and i'm like you forget if you don't do it how loud guns are like just they are you know and i
can hear it i'm like i hear my hearing i can't tolerate this and if i if i don't stop if i don't
get out of this room my hearing will be permanently damaged yeah and if i if i don't stop if i don't get out of this room
my hearing will be permanently damaged yeah definitely like i need to you know that's that's
pretty rough and i wonder i wonder how soldiers put up with that i mean do soldiers just have
ear protection or is it just something that nowadays nowadays most of your your military
like so like especially your your infantry guys most of them have some kind of ear pro
would i always wore i didn't I never did combat at all, but
any training exercise, anything we did, always
hearing protection. Did you have the
plugs or was it... It was the orange plugs.
No, you can't F around with
the big old ears, the muffs.
The new helmets you can, man.
You can put the muffs that are connected.
Oh, sure. Oh, that would be nice.
I can dig that.
I'm not a robot. But that's one of the things like, things like i mean the military like if you look at the even even your
your regular rifleman infantry like they're pretty well equipped they're they're they're
walking out with like they're walking out with hard armor for rifles and they're walking out
with with a decent amount of armor for flack and they're walking out with ear pro and and most
of them are getting at least a a single tube night vision and you know they're they're really well
they're really well armed you can just go right down to the local px and a lot of places in town
like jacksville you can you can if the government's not going to give it to you can you can load up
yourself and take what you need yeah how about i mean actually i'm curious like you you're a you're a musician right like and i mean ear
production's got to be a big deal for you too when you're just playing yeah well i mean so like
on stage we have we wear in-ear monitors so i'm in control of like how loud it is but it's it's
you know they're they're form-fitting they're they're you know they're expensive as hell to
to get the ear you know the they're
multi-drivers there's multiple little speakers in there and stuff and they've got a you know full
range and stuff i've been doing it 25 years and i have tinnitus you know um on stage it you'll i'll
start out at a certain volume and depending on the size of the stage or where we're playing it's like
if you're playing a smaller place and you're right on top of the drums or you're close to the drums,
you kind of need to crank it up and it gets loud in there.
But if you're playing in a big arena, you kind of turn it down.
But it's a real balancing act because you want to be in the moment
and you want to be able to hear the crowd.
So you have mics that are facing out to the crowd and you have to turn those up,
but then you've got a lot of splashback and stuff.
So it's, like I said, it's a balancing act and it's tough and i think
i've definitely got tinnitus i hear it ringing right now um that's part of the reason why like
i'll wear these for a little while but before the end of the show usually i'll end up taking them
off because just having that kind of over the ear even though i turn every every time i sit no
matter where i sit down,
whoever was there before me has it way louder than I want it.
I'll go and sit down where Mary does to do PCC,
and she's got it cranked up.
He just jumps out of his seat because her volume is just sky high.
I'm like, girl, you're going to be deaf in a year.
But yeah, it's a real thing.
And I shoot a lot too, and I don't skimp on ear pro.
I wear expensive expensive you have to
it's important you can be old you never gain your hearing back once your hearing is gone it's gone
yep so let's see here awoken state florida says first time super chat love you all and everything
you do wanted to shout out my man's new channel department of deportation also a website with
t-shirts for sale i was hoping you can help get him some extra
visibility more viewers thanks uh congratulations on your new endeavor department of deportation
great name you know it'd be so popular for the next four years yeah right all right mystery
beard said my vinyl of anti-fragile arrives sat sunday sick man thank you so much I appreciate it if you're looking to get
a copy of all that remains new record you can go to all that remains online or you can get it off
of Amazon I think they've got the the I think they have the CDs if not go to go to all that
remains online.com we got him there let's see Anthony Green says if you do not know who Raisin
Kane is you have to hear his story He's the general who told Trump
ISIS could be defeated in weeks not years
It's legit Trump's funniest story
From 45 I will check that out that's worth
Looking into
Yeah
Phil talking
About Diddy and Epstein while wearing a TTI
Shirt is a bold move
I'm not sure why
I'm not going to talk about what TTI shirt is a bold move. I'm not sure why.
I'm not going to talk about what TTI is because YouTube has rules.
But if you know, you know.
So, yeah, I'm not sure why that's a bold move.
Let's see.
Dark Angel Don or Poops.
There you go. First Super Chat longtime fan wanted to highlight the fact that General Jim Slife also got fired today.
He was a toxic POS over at FSOC and pushed DEI shit hard.
Also openly hated enlisted people, MAGA.
You know, it's bad news when your brass hates the enlisted.
Yeah.
Yes.
You know?
Yes.
I like the brass to begin with with but if you give hate back
you can go f the f off i mean hate has to only flow up hate cannot flow down i mean yeah why
do you want to even want to do that with your lives you like hate the people you're you know
the soldiers serving under you that's and it's a huge deal it's like lives their lives you're
dealing with and everything man you can't be effing around with that. All right.
So smash that like button, share the show with your friends and go on over to TimCast.com.
Join the Discord.
And yeah.
So, Will, you got anything you want to shout out?
Yes.
A3PAction.org.
So Article 3 Project.
We are, you know, we haven't really talked a huge amount about this, maybe a little.
We're all about getting people confirmed.
Now, a lot of President Trump's main nominees have gotten confirmed, but now we're on the subordinates and there's a lot of very important people.
Even the Labor Secretary?
Yeah.
Well, I mean, I think we just, we believe Trump should get all his appointees.
Okay.
So including the ones we don't necessarily agree with on policy.
So we think you should support them.
But there's a lot of people like Harmeet Dhillon, who's going to be running the civil
rights section at DOJ.
People like Gail Slater is going to be running antitrust and going after big tech.
There are a lot of like secondary nominees that some of these senators might be getting ideas about, oh, we could maybe stop them.
Go to a3paction.org.
We make it unbelievably easy for you to contact your senator.
Like you just you click a couple of buttons and you send an email to your senator.
And trust me, that's what they pay attention to. they don't pay attention to the broader hubbub necessarily but if you are a
constituent and you email your senator and they hear about it they're going to take that seriously
it's a streamlined streamlined you know within a minute you'll have an email at the door and you
don't even you don't know so a3paction.org uh guys if you want to follow me instagram and twix
at brett dasovik on both of those platforms
but what you should do is join us Monday through Friday
at 3pm Eastern on YouTube
Pop Culture Crisis, it's a lot less serious
than all of the various
serious stuff that we talk here
we have a lot of fun, you should come join us on Monday
Friends, if you want to follow me
come to X, I'm at Raymond G. Stanley
on X, Raymond G sanley jr on
the internet i have some uh based takes that are semi good sometimes so i had a great time it was
a great friday uh will always a great conversation sir absolutely um also uh yo congratulations to
tim allison they they had the thing and so that so that's yes congratulations i'm not i so it's oh you know
shout out i am phil that remains on x you can subscribe to me there i'm phil that remains
official on instagram the band is all that remains the new record dropped on january 31st
it is called anti-fragile you can head on over to apple music youtube spotify pandora amazon music
and deezer to check it out please do and also don't forget the left lane is for crime.
It is a Friday, so keep an eye out here
for updates throughout the weekend
and we will see you all back here on Monday. you you